Democratic presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama waves to the gathered crowd as he arrives to make a speech in front of the Victory Column (Siegessaeule) in Berlin July 24, 2008.
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Calculated political ploy.
Timely foreign outreach. A dash of each? Ask voters across the country about
Barack Obama's image-packed week of foreign travel and you'll get a mix of
admiration, suspicion, even a couple of bored shrugs.
"I didn't know they
could vote in our elections," Phil Wadlind, 62, deadpanned as he worked
the children's train at The Mall of New Hampshire in Manchester, N.H.
Interviewed this week in
bus stops and coffee shops, bookstores and shopping malls in six battleground
states, these voters ranged from wide-eyed enthusiasts to gimlet-eyed skeptics
and many viewed the trip through their own ideological lens.
Ronald
Loring, a Miami Beach
eye doctor, spoke for many when he observed that Obama had no choice,
politically, to make a trip to counter Republican rival John McCain's perceived
strength on foreign policy and national security.
"I'm impressed with
his ability to communicate," he said. "I don't think that (the trip)
will particularly make him a better president." Will he vote for Obama?
"I'm sort of torn."
As a media event, Obama's
trip has been a political coup. He's been photographed with troops in Afghanistan, flying virtual shotgun in the sky
over Baghdad with Gen. David Petraeus, bowing
his head in prayer at Jerusalem's Western Wall,
and addressing a throng in the streets of Berlin.
No doubt, Obama's trip is
politically motivated. His main challenge in his campaign for the presidency is
to assure US voters that he can be a commander in chief who can manage two
armed conflicts and build alliances overseas.
What's more, the Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks and wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan
have elevated the status of international affairs in American politics.
"By him going
overseas and talking with the Israeli government and the people who mean the
most to the United States ... I think what he's doing is great," said
50-year-old Robert Lindenbusch, pausing as he rode his bicycle down a Miami
Beach sidewalk. "What he's showing now is that he has the experience to go
out and reach out to these people and to say to them 'Hey, this is Barack
Obama. I'm here. Let's work together.' "
"It's important for
us to see him interact and to see how people respond," added Meghan Gilliss,
25-year-old bookstore owner in the college town of Columbia, Mo.
Dale Whitesell, a teacher and
registered Democrat in Washington's northern Virginia suburbs, was delighted to see Obama spend time
with US soldiers in Afghanistan
and Iraq.
"I like the fact that he was
around people in the military," Whitesell, 54, said as she finished
running errands at a local strip mall. "I think he made an effort, as much
as possible, to see what was really going on."
That Obama needs to fortify his
credentials is not lost even on his supporters.
"He didn't serve in the
military, so it's still important for him to touch base with the military and
let them know his views on it," said James Hough, a 51-year-old nursing
home dishwasher, as he waited at a downtown Pittsburgh bus stop on his way to work
Thursday.
Yet others worry the exposure could
backfire.
"It's showing his
inexperience, which is a concern for a lot of people, especially Democrats like
myself who liked Hillary Clinton," said George Londono, 42, from Merrimack, N.H.,
who said he now backs Obama.
If Obama was seeking to reassure
doubting voters, among the more skeptical blocs have been American Jews. His
Democratic primary rival, Hillary Rodham Clinton, had 66 percent support among
Jews and Obama has been trying to rally them to his side since he secured the
Democratic nomination last month.
It has not been an easy task. Jews,
who vote heavily Democratic, do support Obama and he is well ahead of McCain,
according to public opinion polls. But his support is not as strong as that
enjoyed in 2004 by John Kerry, then the Democratic presidential nominee.
Ahron Leichtman, a Jewish writer
and film producer from suburban Cincinnati,
supports Obama, but wondered how well the senator knows the history and sources
of strife for Israel and the
Middle East.
"Does he really understand the
hatred that exists there?" said Leichtman, 65, as he visited the new
Jewish community center in AmberleyVillage on the Cincinnati
outskirts. "I don't know if he's naive enough to believe that he can be
the catalyst to make peace, but he's a charismatic person."
Obama may have had an answer to
Leichtman this week, when he cautioned that it is "unrealistic to expect
that a US
president alone can suddenly snap his fingers and bring about peace in this
region."
While some may harbor doubts,
others are downright suspicious.
Bobbi Lopez-Albright, a 75-year-old
independent attending a political affairs discussion at the Jewish community
Center in Philadelphia, said she was disturbed
by Obama's friendship with Rashid Khalidi, an advocate of Palestinian rights
and the director of the Middle East Institute at ColumbiaUniversity's School of International
and Public Affairs.
"I think this is just a
political move on his part," Lopez-Albright said of Obama's trip. "He
has shown nothing in my eyes that says that he cares anything about Israel."
Brian Jaffee, director of the
Jewish Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Cincinnati,
pointed out that McCain also visited Israel earlier this year. That
shows that pro-Israel American Jews maintain an effective voice in the
political process, he said.
"It excites me that both are
over there," said Jaffee, 34. "I feel blessed, as an American and a
member of the Jewish community, that we have two presidential candidates who
are so supportive of a strong US-Israel relationship."
But some voters expressed
frustration with the media frenzy that they said has infected Obama's trip and
said they didn't plan to vote on the basis of Obama's foreign policy experience
anyway.
"What concerns me is what's
going on inside the country. That's the first thing that has to be fixed,"
said Azzy Ram, who owns a Miami Beach
toy store. "Foreign policy, he won't be able to change much anyway."
"I can't deal with all the hype,"
added Laura Caldwell, a 47-year-old registered Republican from Herndon, Va.
Still, she's considering voting for Obama and doesn't worry about his lack of
experience.
"I'm not sure any president
ever has enough experience," she said. "We should expect that they
are smart enough to hire good advisers."